question about vectorization using indexes
1 visualizzazione (ultimi 30 giorni)
Mostra commenti meno recenti
Hello, I am trying to do the following operations in matlab but I have a problem with how to properly write my code using vectorization. This is just an example, m, n and the values of the vectors and matrices are just to illustrate my problem. In reality m and n can go up to 1000.
n=5; m=8;
a=4*ones(m,1); a(2)=2;a(n)=3;
b=2*ones(n,2);b(1,1)=5;b(3,1)=1;
ind=3*ones(n,2);
ind(1,2)=0;ind(3,2)=0; b(1,2)=0;b(3,2)=0;
non=zeros(1,n);c=zeros(1,n);
for i=1:n
non(i)=nnz(ind(i,:));
c(i)=prod(a(ind(i,1:non(i)))'.^b(i,1:non(i)),2);
end
I tried the following but it does not give correct results.
i=1:n;c=prod(a(ind(i,1:non(i))).^b(i,1:non(i)),2);
Thank you in advance
4 Commenti
Guillaume
il 30 Lug 2019
Modificato: Guillaume
il 30 Lug 2019
Note that :
non = nnz(ind(i,:));
x = a(ind(i,1:non);
can be written more simply as:
x = a(nonzeros(ind(i, :)));
which is a lot easier to understand (particularly given the poorly named variables).
--edit:--
I reiterate Adam's question, what is the intent of the line
c(i)=prod(a(ind(i,1:non(i)))'.^b(i,1:non(i)),2)
We now that it's what you want to vectorise. It'd be a lot easier to do if we knew what you're trying to do with it.
In particular, I'll point out that with the example given, the above will always pick element a(3), regardless of i.
Risposta accettata
Stephen23
il 30 Lug 2019
Modificato: Stephen23
il 30 Lug 2019
Note that ind and b must be transposed for this to work:
>> a = [4;2;1;3;1;4;4;0]; % must be column!
>> ind = [1,0;2,3;4,0;3,3;5,3].'; % transposed!
>> b = [5,0;2,2;1,0;2,2;2,2].'; % transposed!
>> idx = b~=0;
>> XC = ind(idx);
>> bC = b(idx);
>> [~,idc] = find(idx);
>> out = accumarray(idc,a(XC).^bC,[],@prod)
out =
1024
4
3
1
1
0 Commenti
Più risposte (2)
Guillaume
il 30 Lug 2019
Modificato: Guillaume
il 30 Lug 2019
Another option is to append a 0 (or any finite value) to the start of a and increase ind by 1, so a(ind+1) is always valid. Assuming that b is 0 when ind is 0 as in your example (if not, it's trivially fixed), then anything.^0 is 1 and multiplying by 1 doesn't affect the result, so:
apadded = [0; a];
c = prod(apadded(ind + 1) .^ b, 2)
As a bonus, c is a column vector matching the rows of b.
If b can be non-zero when ind is 0:
c = prod(apadded(ind + 1) . ^ (b .* (ind ~= 0)), 2)
to compensate.
edit: actually, if b can be non-zero when ind is 0, the easiest is to pad a with a 1 instead of a zero. Since 1.^anything is 1, it doesn't affect anything:
apadded = [1; a];
c = prod(apadded(ind + 1) .^b, 2) %b can be zero or non-zero where ind is 0. It'll result in 1.^something
1 Commento
Guillaume
il 31 Lug 2019
Note: although both options are very fast even for very large inputs, this option is about twice as fast as the accepted answer. And much simpler and using less memory.
Andrei Bobrov
il 31 Lug 2019
ind(ind == 0) = 1;
c = prod(a(ind).^b,2);
2 Commenti
Guillaume
il 31 Lug 2019
Yes, that will also works as long as b is 0 when ind is 0, since a(1).^0 is 1.
Andrei Bobrov
il 31 Lug 2019
lo = ind == 0;
ind(lo) = 1;
c = prod(a(ind).^(b.*~lo),2);
Vedere anche
Categorie
Scopri di più su Function Creation in Help Center e File Exchange
Prodotti
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!